Space Shuttle Atlantis
CAPE CANAVERAL, US (AFP): Showers and thunderstorms are likely to develop in Florida around the time of this week's planned final launch of the space shuttle, NASA's weather officer has said.
"We have a 60 per cent chance of KSC (Kennedy Space Center) weather prohibiting launch," shuttle weather officer Kathy Winters told reporters Tuesday, ahead of Friday's planned liftoff.
"Our primary concern for launch would be showers and thunderstorms within 20 nautical miles," said Winters.
She added that the turbulent weather and clouds were likely to move in "near the end of the countdown, right around that 11 am time period."
Atlantis is set for liftoff on July 8 at 11:26 am (local time) from Kennedy Space Center for a 12-day mission to the International Space Station with four US astronauts on board.
The flight will be the last by a US shuttle, ending the 30-year program and leaving a gap in US human spaceflight.
Until a new crew vehicle can be built, the world's astronauts will have to rely on Russia's space capsules.
If weather forces a delay in Friday's liftoff, other opportunities will arise on Saturday and Sunday. The weather improves to a 40 per cent chance of weather prohibiting launch on Saturday, and a 30 per cent chance on Sunday.
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